*** Welcome to piglix ***

Aldgate Pump


Aldgate Pump is a historic water pump in London, located at the junction where Aldgate meets Fenchurch Street and Leadenhall Street.

The pump marks the start of the A11 road towards Norwich and distances to locations in Middlesex, Essex and beyond were measured from here. This contributed to the pump's status as the symbolic start of the East End of London.

Aldgate Pump is a Grade II listed structure. As a well, it was mentioned during the reign of King John. As the City of London developed, it is thought to have been taken down and re-erected at its current location in 1876, as a drinking fountain, as streets were widened.

Served by one of London's many underground streams, people began to complain about the "funny" taste of the water. Upon investigation, this was found to be caused by the leaching of calcium from the bones of the dead in many new cemeteries in north London through which the stream ran. In 1876, the New River Company changed the supplies to mains water.

The wolf head on the pump is supposed to signify the last wolf shot in the City of London.

Fenchurch Street railway station was built in 1841 upon the site of Aldgate Pump Court.

Aldgate Pump was also the name of a song, written by G. W. Hunt for the lion comique Arthur Lloyd in 1869. In the song, the raconteur is abandoned by the girl "I met near Aldgate Pump".

There is also a landmark in the township of Aldgate in the Adelaide Hills in South Australia known as the "Aldgate Pump". It is a disused hand pump which was originally located directly outside the Aldgate Pump Hotel. It was relocated to the intersection of Kingsland Road and Mount Barker Road but was removed in 2009 to make way for roadworks and installed on a pedestal on the footpath in the Aldgate Main Street in 2011.


...
Wikipedia

...